Gathering On The Rim People Build a Park

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1 National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Gathering On The Rim People Build a Park By Dr. Jadelyn J. Moniz Nakamura A World Heritage site NATIONAL PARK HAWAI I VOLCANOEs Hawai i Volcanoes National Park Occasional Papers Volume 1, Number 2, Fall 2010 and biosphere reserve Celebrating Hawai i Volcanoes National Park s Centennial Anniversary

2 Gathering On The Rim

3 Hawaii National Park Hawaii National Park (HNP) was established in 1916 as the fifteenth park in the National Park Service system. Hawaii National Park was formed by the efforts of ordinary citizens who pushed for and sought the recognition of Kīlauea, Mauna Loa and Haleakalā as having national significance. The inclusion of these areas into a national park led to the protection of unique natural and cultural resources, and the promotion of scientific study of volcanoes. Although the park was established in 1916, it wasn t until 1921 that the official dedication took place. And, it was not until 1922 that the first superintendent was assigned to the park, and on-the-ground management began. Even after active management by the park service began, federal funding for projects, programs, and facilities were limited. The new park still had to rely on the local government, other federal agencies, and philanthropic organizations to fund basic park operations and infrastructure. This trend of relying on outside help was not a new one to Hawaii National Park. Even before the park was established, public groups and private individuals worked to enhance and develop the Kīlauea area for scientific, conservation, and recreational purposes. Pre Park Development Kīlauea s popularity with western visitors began very early on in the historic period of the Hawaiian Islands. The first written reference to the volcano at Kīlauea dates to 1794, and is found in the journal of Archibald Menzies, the naturalist on board Captain George Vancouver s ship the Discovery. Missionaries from the London Mission Society followed Menzies visit to Kīlauea in Included in this group were the Reverends Asa Thurston and William Ellis. Ellis, one of the first Euro-Americans to witness a volcanic Image Inside Cover: Copy of 1921 map depicting Kïlauea Caldera, Hawaii National Park. Photo Right: Kïlauea Volcano eruption in the early 20th century. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. National Park Service 1

4 Photo Top: Visitors to Kilauea searing postcards in hot lava. Image Courtesy of National Park Service, Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. eruption in Hawai i, described Kilauea in detail in his journal which was later published. His words and descriptions opened the world to this special place. 1 Following Ellis, until approximately 1845, there came a flood of other missionaries, scientists, and American military personnel who came to the volcano either to Christianize the local inhabitants, to study the volcano, or to explore its natural surroundings. After 1845, visitors to Kīlauea were primarily interested in pleasure tours to the volcanic landscape. They marveled at the breathtaking scenery, and were less interested in systematic study than they were in casual observation. 2 As a result of the increasing popularity of the area, there came a need for places to house these visitors as well as roads and trails to facilitate travel. Although ancient Hawaiian trails did exist throughout the Kīlauea region, the advent of vehicular travel in the form of horse and buggy, albeit crude, put additional strain and demand on the existing trail systems. It was soon apparent that improved roads, trails and lodging were much needed to help insure access to the area by residents and non-residents. Community leaders such as Lorrin A. Thurston, who was a key force in the push to create Hawaii National Park, was especially concerned with making the area available and open to all visitors 3. In a paper written to promote his idea for a National Park, Thurston stressed the fact that much of the area proposed for a park was on private property, that a toll of $1.00 was once charged to access the only road to the lava lake, and that many areas of interest were either inaccessible or unknown to the public. 4 Lodging Power of the People Kīlauea was, and continues to be, a considerable distance from the closest population centers (30 miles from Hilo to the east and 90 miles from Kona to the west). In the early historic period, such a long distance for traveling required most to stay overnight. Very early on there was a need for housing at the caldera. Development of lodging for visitors to Kīlauea, even prior to the creation of Hawaii National Park, had been a private effort by local citizens. The very earliest travelers to the volcano erected improvised shelters from available fern fronds, grass and other local materials. 5 These shelters were temporary usually lasting for only a single visit, and they were not very comfortable. In 1844, a report in the Polynesian stated that a local Hawaiian had constructed a grass hut on the edge of the crater and was providing food and other conveniences to travelers. 6 The first formal lodging to be built at Kīlauea was a grass house constructed in 1846 by Benjamin Pitman. The hut was built on the north-east side of the crater and became known as the first Volcano House. The building was crude, with a mat covering the single room, earthen floor. At a dollar a head, visitors could purchase fowl for 37.5 cents, a hen turkey for 62.5 cents and a small calabash of potatoes for 25 cents. 7 Despite having constructed the Volcano House for visitors to Kīlauea, Pitman apparently did not actively manage the facility. Charles Hitchcock reported in 1856 that the lodging was there, but there was no one around not even a manager. In 1866 a second formal lodge was built by J.L. Richardson & Co. Also called the Volcano House, it too was made of grass, but was apparently much more comfortable 2 Gathering On The Rim

5 "Having visited Kilauea in the days when the old shed with its open door and hole in the centre, for a fireplace, were all the accomodation for poor weary travellers; how great is our appreciation and admiration of the present delightful dwelling which well deserves the name of hotel." M.A. Chamberlain, 1866 Volcano House Register "This is the best hotel in the Kingdom." J.M. Nelson, 1882 Volcano House Register and impressive. Thus began the start of a succession of visitor accommodations with various iterations of Volcano Houses being built through time (the third in 1877, a large addition to that in 1891, and finally a new Volcano House in 1941 after the 1891 addition burned down). Kīlauea was popular amongst military personnel as well as the general public. In 1915, lodging specific for members of the military was proposed by L.A. Thurston. Known as the Kilauea Military Camp (KMC), the facility was developed as a recreational center for regular Army members serving in the territory, and as a maneuvering ground for the Hawaii National Guard. 8 Much like the development of hotels in the area, KMC also started as a grass roots effort by local citizens to develop and fund the facility. Thurston was able to raise $24,000 of public subscription for the construction of buildings and other improvements for KMC. Fifty acres of land was leased from the Bishop Estate, and the facility was run by a Board of Trustees (comprised of Thurston and four others). 9 KMC opened in the fall of 1916 the same year Hawaii National Park was established by Congress. In 1920 the Bishop Estate deeded the land under KMC to the Territory of Hawai i. On June 28, 1921 the territory deeded the land to the United States Government as part of Hawaii National Park. 10 It continues to be run today as a recreational facility for military members, retirees and their families. Transportation Local and National Government Action Unlike the business development of lodging at Kīlauea, the earliest mechanized road and trail development in Volcano was sponsored by the local government. For the Territory of Hawai i, roads served as an integral part of its infrastructure. They supported the transportation "After travelling over half the civilized and uncivilized world I can congratulate Mr. Shipman on having a house of accommodation that is not surpassed or equalled for its excellence (excepting pens) by any other that I have visited at such a distance from any town." Tom Southwick, 1884 Volcano House Register Photo Right: Volcano House, HAVO Image 4781, Bernice P. Bishop Museum. National Park Service 3

6 Work was renewed on the remaining portion of the Volcano Road at Keawaanakaaha in Olaa on August 13, The work is principally to be done by prison labor, with an additional expenditure of about one thousand dollars a month. Nine miles of road must be built before a connection is made with the old trail at the cattle pen from which point it is six and a half miles to the Volcano House. Wm. N. Bruner, Honolulu, Aug 1891 Volcano House Register Photo Top: 19th-20th century image of travelers. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 4 Gathering On The Rim needs of the resident population as well as enhanced the visitor experience to the islands. Construction of a modern road at Kīlauea began in 1911, with a road from the Volcano House to Halema uma u. The road was built via Kīlauea Iki crater by local prisoners. The prisoners were housed in an area called the Old Summer Camp built especially to house them. 11 Once the Volcano House to Halema uma u road was completed, the same group of prisoners turned their efforts to building a trail along the route of what is now the Chain of Craters Road. Called Cocketts Trail, after the construction supervisor, the trail ended at Devils Throat. 12 Finally, the prisoners reconstructed an existing trail across the floor of Kīlauea. The trail provided another link between the Volcano House and Halema uma u. The third local government sponsored effort to improve the Kīlauea infrastructure occurred in 1915 with the construction of a road leading from what is now known as Nāmakanipaio Campground to the town of Ka ū. This road was also built by local prisoners who camped in tents near Nāmakani in an area known as the Old Prison Camp. 13 Also in 1915, the Army, local government, and the Hawaiian Volcano Research Association (see below) contributed funds and personnel to build a trail linking Kīlauea and Mauna Loa. The funding also provided for the construction of a rest shelter, water tank, and stable at the 10,000 foot level at a place called Red Hill. 14 The trail and shelter ideas were conceived by L.A. Thurston, strongly supported by Thomas Jaggar, and built by soldiers from the US Army s twenty-fifth infantry division. These men were part of the famous Buffalo Soldiers a group of African American soldiers who were stationed at Schofield Barracks on Oahu. By 1911, the funding for construction of roads and trails provided by the territorial government and the County of Hawai i had reached $100, This spending was a considerable amount of money for that time period (equivalent to $2.2 million in 2010). Hawaiian Volcano Research Association (Science and Research) While most of the visitors to Kīlauea were drawn to its scenery and landscape, the geologic forces which were the source of this beauty also drew in scientists and researchers interested in studying active volcanism. Although there was an obvious need for improved roads and trails throughout the area, Kīlauea volcano was popular with scientists and researchers because of the relative ease of accessing the site. Like the development of infrastructure, efforts to fund research at Kīlauea were largely driven by private citizens. These individuals banded together and formed associations to fund visiting scientists and paid for equipment and research facilities. Interest in the geology of the area was far reaching. Researchers from the mainland United States who traveled world-wide, found Kīlauea to be a great place to study active volcanoes. The most famous of these researchers was Thomas Jaggar. Jaggar, a scientist with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), traveled to Hawai i and visited Kīlauea in 1909 on his way to Japan. On this trip, Jaggar suggested that an observatory should be built at Kīlauea to continuously study the volcano. 16

7 Lorrin A. Thurston took up Jaggar s suggestion, and in 1911 established the Hawaiian Volcano Research Association (HVRA). Thurston became its first Director. An all volunteer organization, funding for HVRA sponsored research projects and facilities, was raised through subscription. The HVRA had four main goals. The first was to promote systematic and continuous observation of volcanoes and earthquakes, the second to record and publish those observations, the third was to host individuals and organizations conducting scientific investigations, and the fourth goal was to promote the establishment of like areas across the Pacific. 17 Within a year, the association established an observatory with funding from local citizens and instruments loaned from the local college. 18 Other projects accomplished by the association included assistance to complete the trail to Mauna Loa and facilities at Red Hill. In 1919, the association also funded a project to measure the rise and fall of lava in Halema uma u every fifteen minutes for four consecutive weeks. They paid for two trips by Jaggar to Washington to promote the creation of Hawaii National Park and enlisted the support and participation of the US Government through the Weather Bureau to maintain the observatory at Kīlauea. 19 In its first ten years of existence ( ), the Hawaiian Volcano Research Association spent $61,000 on projects at Kīlauea. The largest percentage of this funding was raised through private subscription and membership ($55,000), the remaining was provided by MIT ($6,000). 20 Photo Right: Kïlauea Volcano, Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. National Park Service 5

8 Post Park Development All of the pre-1916 infrastructure development at Kīlauea was critically important to the growth of Hawaii National Park. Even after it became a park, the federal government did not provide substantial funding for a number of years. The little funding that was provided in the early years went towards the purchase of land. After 1921, the meager appropriations provided to the park were used for the upkeep of existing roads rather than for the development of new facilities. In debating the creation of the park, Congress was keen on not committing to something that was going to be a financial burden on taxpayers. In the records of the Hearing before the Committee on Public Lands, Congressman Taylor specifically questioned Jaggar as to whether it was going to be an obligation upon the Government to buy, at possibly exorbitant prices, these private holdings within the proposed park, in order to make the park conveniently accessible and of the highest use. In an effort to control spending for the new park, Congress capped the annual appropriations for Hawaii National Park at $10,000 a year. The total amount appropriated was not received until 1922 (eight years after the park was established). In 1919 and 1920 only $750 was provided to the park by the federal government. Just slightly more ($1,000) was appropriated in 1921, but only a fraction was spent ($62.49). None of the funding was used for park management or improvement of infrastructure. Instead, the money was used to purchase private lands included in the designated park boundary. The law establishing Hawaii National Park specifically prohibited Congress from appropriating funds for the park other than for the acquisition of land that would provide easements and rights of ways over private lands which would allow for the park to be reasonably accessible in all of its parts. 21 Hawaii National Park was finally able to begin significant management of its resources in Not only did Congress appropriate the total fundable amount for the park ($10,000), official staffing of the park also began. From 1916 to 1921, Hawaii National Park was overseen by B.G. Rivenburgh, the Territorial Land Commissioner who also functioned as the NPS representative. 22 For the first three months of 1922, A.O. Burkland was assigned as the acting superintendent. Following Burkland, in April 1922, Thomas R. Boles was made superintendent and became the first federal official to begin administration of Hawaii National Park. 23 Private Citizens to the Rescue The $10,000 appropriation provided by Congress in 1922 was used solely for basic services providing visitor access to existing roads and trails, and building the first administrative offices for park staff. This funding was meant to cover a park that encompassed 187 square miles (119,679 acres) across two islands. The annual reports for provided by park superintendent Thomas Boles repeatedly stressed the overwhelming needs of the park, and asked for the funding limit to be raised. 24 Without an increase in federal funds, the park continued to rely on private individuals and groups to raise money for basic services and amenities for visitors. In 1922, for example, the local Honolulu newspaper printed thousands of maps for hikers at no cost to the park. 25 Between 1921 and 1924 visitation to the park increased by 31% from 16,071 in 1921 to 52,210 in Despite its popularity, the newly established Hawaii National Park was not able to provide any housing facilities for its staff, let alone its visitors. Thus, it was left to private enterprise to fill this much needed gap. Kīlauea Volcano House Company filled the void when they began establishment of a Summer Camp in The proposed camp would consist of enough cottages to house 40 people, a main building for serving meals, and a road to access the site. There was a lot of interest in using the Camp. Even before it was built, over 100 applications to use the facilities had been received. Most of these came from teachers and the Girl Scouts Gathering On The Rim

9 Photo Top Left: Photo of the Summer Camp in 1959 after Kïlauea Iki eruption destroyed the site. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Image Top Right: Seal of Hui O Pele. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Establishment of Hui O Pele Community members recognized the need, and realized the potential, to raise funds for basic services and facilities for the new park. In 1922, C.C. Moore who was the head of a San Francisco engineering company and president of the Pan-Pacific Exposition visited the Kīlauea section of the park. He was completely awed by the beauty of the area and the interesting features he saw. Moore commented on the new park at a luncheon of the Honolulu Ad Club on May 3, 1922 in which he was the guest of honor. During his remarks to the club he proposed the idea of providing visitors to Kīlauea Volcano with a certificate, signed by a park official, which would be proof of their visit. Moore said: Fancy what a membership in such an organization would mean in publicity. In our party alone there were representatives of twenty States. This would get your visitors organized where they would do the most good. Then when you ask for an appropriation from Congress you would have support from every State in the Union. 28 Moore immediately donated $100 to help defray the cost of setting up such a program and asked then Governor of Hawai i, Wallace R. Farrington to support the plan. Farrington assigned George Mellen, editor of the Honolulu Ad Club s weekly newspaper Welakahao, to work on the details. 29 The group adopted the name Hui O Pele because they wanted the name to be entirely Hawaiian and they felt that Pele, goddess of volcanoes, and Hawai i, the territory, had enjoyed considerable publicity. 30 After some delay in selecting an emblem, the chairman of the Hui designed it, and the committee unanimously approved it. Each new member in the Hui was given a certificate that stated that the individual had visited the volcano Kīlauea, had made an acceptable offering to Pele, and was therefore granted a lifetime membership for one dollar ($1). To top it off, the certificate was seared, and sealed with fire by the Goddess Pele. Members were also given a button bearing the newly designed black and red emblem. A limited number of 200 Charter memberships available for ten dollars ($10) were offered. Regular lifetime members were not required to pay any dues beyond the original one dollar fee for joining. At the outset of the organization, the committee decided that the first ten of the 200 charter memberships would National Park Service 7

10 go to distinguished persons. To be considered in this category, the individual had to have played a key role in either furthering the work of the organization or they had to be associated with volcanology. To broaden membership in the Hui even further, the organizers decided to extend membership to those who had previously visited Kīlauea. To gain membership all one had to do was provide some sort of proof that they had been to the volcano. Numerous applicants sent in their claims verified by hotel registers, steamship passenger lists or other references. 31 The committee completed their work and turned over control to the Honolulu Ad Club which would keep the funds and management of the Hui separate from its other duties. All funds were solely for operating the Hui and for projects that promoted the interest in Kīlauea and the environs within the National Park. 32 Hui O Pele began as an official organization in February 1923, and a year and a half later membership had reached 1,024. Hui Funding Begins Defining the Goals Hui O Pele began funding projects in the park in 1927, when they constructed shelters for visitors at Kīlauea. The shelters were located at key, popular locations including Thurston Lava Tube, on the east side of Pauahi Crater where the Chain of Craters road crossed Keauhou Road, and at Halema uma u Trail. 33 The shelters would provide a dry shaded location for visitors to rest. The original idea and design was submitted by Hui member L.W. de Vis-Norton. The final design was developed by Thomas Vint, the National Park Service s Chief Landscape Engineer. The shelters were all lava masonry structures with double benches and iron roofs. The iron roofs were necessary to catch rain water which drained into three barrels that were attached to the buildings. The water would be used for drinking by visitors to the area. 34 The park service provided the man power to construct the donated shelters. A total of 55 man-days were expended by the National Park Service to erect these Photo Right: The Sierra Club at Halema uma u in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 8 Gathering On The Rim

11 shelters more days than was spent on improving the parks roads for that year. 35 Following the successful construction of the first three shelters, HNP Superintendent Evans requested an additional $800 from the Hui to build two lava benches and a larger shelter in May Soon after Evans made his request, he was replaced by Thomas J. Allen Jr. The park s 1928 request sparked a period of conflict between the Hui and the new park superintendent. Hui Chairman de Vis-Norton supported the construction of additional shelters in the park, but he strongly discouraged anything being built on the rim of Halemaumau. He felt that if shelters were built on the rim, there was potential for hoodlums to break apart the seats during eruptive periods just to throw them into the lava lake. He was also concerned with the tendency for rim collapse along Halema uma u when it was not erupting. 37 Instead, he encouraged the park to develop ways to raise more funds for the Hui. He suggested an initiation ceremony into Hui o Pele or some sort of Hawaiian Pageant, such as (a re-enactment of the 1824) defiance of Pele by Princess Kapiolani. 38 He also suggested that the steamship companies add a dollar to their fare which could go towards a membership in the Hui. He wanted the additional monies made from the steamship companies to pay for a brass sundial that Kamehameha Schools wanted to erect on the terrace in front of the Uwēkahuna Museum. 39 re-establishment of a new site. He pointed out the sacredness of the area to the Native Hawaiian people when he wrote: Most of the Hawaiians have a sincere reverence for Halemaumau. To them the place is sacred and they regard the stunt of pluggin golf balls into Pele s abode much as you would view a game of craps played on the grave of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington. To me, it is sacrilege of the worst kind and I sympathize sincerely with their inner feeling that white men should at least respect their age-old beliefs. You can do a lot of good by saying a good word for the Hawaiians now and again. After all, it was their country until we grabbed it, and while they parforce, must accept the situation they are very ready to appreciate a friendly feeling among those who now rule over them, and respond with real affection to any evidence of love for their race. 42 Future correspondence between Superintendent Allen and the Hui continued to show a disagreement over projects the organization was established to support. Photo Right: Visitors at the 19th Hole on the edge of Halema uma u in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Allen supported the idea of a pageant at the rim, but did not support the selling of memberships on the steamships and stated that the sundial design needed the approval of the park service s landscape department. 40 De Vis-Norton stated that the Museum had been built by public subscription and he did not think the donors had meant to donate the building to the United States Government. 41 He also took the opportunity to school the new superintendent in the culturally appropriate position of the park service at Hawaii National Park. He was reacting to the reestablishment of the 19 th hole along the rim of the crater. Hitting golf balls into the crater was a popular stunt for park visitors. After the first tee collapsed into the Caldera, de Vis Norton strongly opposed the National Park Service 9

12 Like his predecessors, Allen held a very Kīlauea-centric focus, and requested funding for projects within that region. Influential members of the Hui, however, were pushing to construct rest shelters at Mauna Loa and Haleakalā. Allen felt these shelters would be too expensive to build, and he pushed for and got a new shelter built in 1930 at the end of Hilina Pali Road. The correspondence between the park and the Hui throughout 1930 focused primarily on discussions over the construction of a lecture hall addition to the Uwēkahuna Observatory. There was much disagreement on the cost of the facility. The Hui feared going into debt by committing to a project they did not have the funds for. 43 The superintendent assured the Hui that the cost would be covered by additional memberships as well as by his own personal involvement in constructing the facility. 44 By the end of 1930, the facility was built for $3, ($ less than the $4,400 estimate). 45 The 1930 s Troubled Times Despite the early donation of funds for the lecture hall and shelter at Hilina Pali, the 1930 s were lean years for the Hui. The Great Depression and a lack of activity at Kīlauea Caldera struck a one-two punch on park visitation. The decline in visitors led to a decrease in the sale of Hui certificates. While the Hui could do nothing about inducing Kīlauea to continue erupting, others tried. In February 1931, an old Hawaiian woman (her age is given as 100) along with eight members of her family were at Halema uma u daily trying to induce Madame Pele to return to the Halema uma u fire pit. 46 Because of the funding challenges faced by the Hui, two issues emerged in the 1930 s that would continue to come up throughout the life of the organization. The first was a question of how to increase and expand membership sales, and the second issue was what the appropriate venues for selling certificates were. Two ideas were suggested. One was to sell them at the Volcano House, and the second was to have drivers sell them to the visitors they brought to the park. The first idea went over well, but the second was considered too tacky and after a trial run was abandoned for lack of vigorous sales. 47 Lamenting the nature of tourism in the islands, Hui Chairman de Vis-Norton continued to push the park to look for creative ways to sell memberships. He was reminded, however, by the new superintendent, Ernest P. Leavitt, of the park s policy of not making active solicitations. 48 Trouble for the Hui extended beyond the issue of raising funds. During this period, the Hui was embroiled in a scandal involving accusations of inappropriate use of Hui funds by then President P.L. Murphy. The conflict led Superintendent Leavitt to suggest, for the first time, that a Natural History Association (called the Hawai i Natural History Association [HNHA]) take over the remaining funds and tasks of the Hui. If none of these ideas worked, Leavitt was ready to have the organization barred by executive order from collecting funds in the park. All of the ideas for disassociating the park with Hui O Pele, however, were ultimately put aside with the resignation of Murphy and the vote in 1934 by the Outdoor Circle of Honolulu (OCH) to accept the custodianship of Hui O Pele. Photo Right: Hilina Pali Shelter built by funds from Hui O Pele. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 10 Gathering On The Rim

13 Image Top Right: 1931 Hui O Pele Certificate. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. The Hui Under New Leadership By-laws proposed by the Outdoor Circle in November 1934 stated that the Hui funds would go towards projects involving improvements made within the national parks of Hawai i, for the benefit of visitors. 49 Edward Wingate, who had become Hawaii National Park Superintendent in 1933, proposed that Hui funds be expanded to include museum collections, (and) rare books of historical or scientific nature. 50 Wingate felt that at some point, all of the necessary buildings in the park would be erected and that the park service would no longer allow any more to be built. 51 This proposal would result in the Hui supporting similar projects as the newly formed HNHA (see discussion below). Despite the turmoil and economic challenges endured by the Hui in the first half of the 1930 s, some significant progress in park development was made. The group was able to raise $700 to purchase 120 chairs for the new Lecture Hall at the Uwēkahuna Observatory in 1931, and a few years later they donated $2,500 for the construction of a rest house at the summit of Mauna Loa. 52 As of January 1936, all seemed to be running smoothly under the Outdoor Circle s care. With funds well over $1,000, Wingate was asked what new projects were needed for the park. While he had a long list (shelters at the picnic grounds, trailside museum at Bird Park, shelters at Makaopuhi and Napau craters, drinking water along trails, a new rest house at Red Hill), he cautioned against spending any more money for the time being, because he had heard rumors that there would be cutbacks in Federal appropriations in the coming years. It is not clear if any projects were approved between 1937 and September 1939 because the park records for Hui O Pele are empty. The records from 1939 to 1941 are also very sparse, but it is known that several of the original members re-wrote and adopted new by-laws. The by-laws reflected Superintendent Wingate s desire to expand the purpose of the group and to use Hui O Pele funds to equip park buildings with furniture, instruments, books, [and] museum displays. 53 There are no correspondence records for Hui O Pele between 1941 and November During World War II, the park was nearly taken over by the military, and hysteria over possible enemy invasion abounded. A few letters of correspondence were found for December 1947, and a single letter was found for The former discussed a $100 purchase of rare 16mm black and white film footage of Kīlauea lake activity during , the steam explosions of 1924, and the Halemaumau 1931 eruption. This was the first time Hui funds were used to purchase eruption films. Park Partners Build A Museum The correspondence records pick up again in January 1949, when members discuss using a substantial amount National Park Service 11

14 ($7,000) of Hui funds towards the development of a museum for the park. The National Park envisioned the museum as an outdoor representation of the natural environment. Its purpose was to explain to the public what there was to see and do in the park; it was not to simply be a display of static specimens. The museum would highlight the volcanology, geology, ethnology, and history of the park. The Hui purchased a Selectoslide in 1949 for use in the new museum. The machine would automatically project slides of scenes and places of interest in the park. This purchase was clearly a departure from past expenditures approved by the Hui, but also recognition that park needs were evolving from an emphasis on infrastructure to one that required more interpretive tools to reach the public. To afford such a large-scale project as the new museum, the Hui felt they needed to more widely promote the group to gain additional memberships. The Hui purchased framed certificates as advertisements, and also expanded its reach by allowing the Hawaii Visitors Bureau to sell Hui memberships. These fundraising efforts helped Hui O Pele pass a landmark point in 1949, when it recorded its 30,000th member after little over a quarter century of existence. Thanks to the Hui, work on the new museum in what is now the park headquarters building and visitor center finally began in 1950, with the arrival of Paul Rockwood, National Park Service Museum Technician. Unfortunately, just as the project seemed to be getting off the ground, there was some concern as to whether or not the government was going to be able to fund the remaining portion. Because of the on-going Korean War, all non-defense agency activities were being cut in 1950 and Superintendent Oberhansley wanted every dollar in the Hui account to be reserved for the museum project. The Hui, however, found it difficult to raise additional funds through new memberships, because of the on-going Korean conflict. 55 KMC was nearly closed, and no certificates were being sold at their desk. Also, a long shipping strike in 1950 Photo Right: Museum Dedication. May 28, Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 12 Gathering On The Rim

15 Photo Right: Late 19th early 20th century photo of visitors. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. resulted in reduced travel to Hawaii National Park. Hui members again began to push more aggressively for new members. They decided to extend their reach by approving the sale of Hui O Pele certificates at the Moana Camera and Gift Shop, and to replace the Hui O Pele pins with membership cards, which were more cost effective to produce. HNHA Steps Up Slowly Just as Hui O Pele struggled to increase its membership, the organization received its biggest boost when the Hawai i Natural History Association (HNHA) became an active partner in 1950 by selling and managing the revenue from Hui O Pele certificates. The Natural History Association was established on March 25, By 1933 a small informal association was already functioning in Hawaii National Park. 56 HNHA s first president, Mr. John E. Doerr, Jr., was elected on November 13, In its early years, the majority of HNHA funds came from extension course fees taught by Mr. Doerr, who donated the money to HNHA. Doerr preffered this method of raising funds because he strongly believed HNHA should not compete with other existing organizations. 57 Unlike Hui O Pele, HNHA took several decades to raise enough funds for donation to the park. In the first few years of its existence, the little money HNHA spent went towards paying for phone bills, and purchasing office supplies and equipment. In 1936, HNHA voted to start a park library, and thus began the long tradition of purchasing books to stock the library shelves. 58 In 1940, because of its relative inactivity, HNHA was reorganized as a nonprofit scientific and historical society cooperating in educational work in the park. The reorganization, spearheaded by Superintendent Edward Wingate, was done as an attempt to stimulate the group. Although several meetings were held over the next year, little was done outside of expanding the park library through book purchase and donations, completing the new constitution, and discussing strategies and possible templates for publications. Just as the newly re-organized group was getting underway, World War II broke out. Like Hui O Pele, the onset of the war impacted the membership and activities of the organization. The last meeting of HNHA prior to the war was held on October, 1941 with no other meetings occurring until January 6, By January 1946, the Association was beginning to make some money through book sales, one dollar annual membership dues, and eruption film sales. 59 By 1948, book and movie sales were going so well, that the Association members voted to do away with the annual $1 dues. The initial membership fee of $1 was maintained, however, and the association expanded its sales items to include a park map. By the following year, HNHA s account had exceeded $2,000. Not only was HNHA raising funds for park projects, but Superintendent Oberhansley also believed that the Association could solve many of the parks publication problems. Prior to the creation of natural history associations, parks had to obtain sale literature through the Government Printing Office. All of the funds made from these sales went directly into the federal treasury and not to the individual parks. With the association, however, the parks could keep the profits and use it for projects that were not part of the general appropriations. Oberhansley felt strongly that the funds derived through the HNHA only be used for those projects that would not, or could not, be funded by the government. 60 National Park Service 13

16 Image Top Right: Hawai i Natural History Association seal. Image courtesy of Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park. 14 Gathering On The Rim A Time of Challenge and Triumph By 1950 HNHA was beginning to hit its stride. It was great timing, as the Hui was struggling to increase its membership and to keep up with the parks increasing requests for funding, especially for its large museum project. By assisting the Hui with certificate sales, the HNHA leadership felt they were helping to promote tourism and thus their sales would benefit as well. By 1950, the association was responsible for selling more than half of the Hui memberships for that year, and they provided much needed advertisement for the Hui on the back of their Trailside Plants pamphlet. 61 With KMC nearly closed during the Korean War, and the federal government backing out on its commitment to fund the new museum, the help from HNHA was needed. In 1951, HNHA partnered with the Park and Hui O Pele to finish building the museum at Kīlauea. The association felt that since one of their primary objectives was to further museum development they should lend as much financial support for the new project as possible. 62 Working together, the Hui was able to focus on raising additional funds through new memberships, while HNHA assisted with advertisement and managing sales. To further expand membership, the Hui began to sell certificates to those who either flew over an active flow, or who had seen an eruption even if it was flowing outside of the park (Mauna Loa was erupting and moving towards Kona in 1950). Adoption of this policy was a drastic change from the original intent of the Hui, which was to encourage members to have physically visited the park. HNHA was also entering new areas of sales to raise the funds needed for the new museum. After seventeen years in existence, the Association finally printed its first publication the Self-Guided Map to Hawaii National Park. 63 The publication was the first in a long list of publications that HNHA would become involved in. Although it was a challenging year for fundraising, 1951 saw the completion and installation of three museum exhibits, which remained the top priority for the park. After the initial exhibits were completed, the Superintendent wanted to keep Paul Rockwood at the park to continue work, but he needed funds to pay Rockwood s salary. He asked the Hui to make another $2,500 immediately available for the project with an addition $4,000 donated by the end of the year. The additional funding was approved by the Hui, but it came with an important stipulation. The Hui leadership requested that the federal government appropriate at least an equal amount to the museum project as they had. This was not to be, because in 1952 the superintendent received a letter from the regional director stating that the park should not count too definitely on additional funds from the regional allotment for museum exhibit construction and that there was no assurance that such funds would be made available. The superintendent was reminded that the annual allotment for museum exhibits for each region was less than $10,000 and that several parks in the region had yet to benefit from the funding. 64 The letter from the regional director must have been a disappointment to the park. However, it appears from the correspondence that the superintendent never passed on the contents of the director s letter to the leadership of Hui O Pele. Oberhansley continued to request additional funding from the Hui, and a month after receiving the regional director s bad news, the Hui

17 transferred an additional $2,000 to the Hawaii National Park Museum to complete four more museum units. By the middle of 1952, a total of $12,000 had been committed by Hui O Pele to the museum. This amounted to nearly half of the projected total cost for the new facility. More funding was still needed to complete the Museum, and the park continued to rely on the Hui and HNHA to cover the expenses. An opportunity to greatly increase Hui O Pele membership arose at midnight June 27th, 1952, when an eruption of Kīlauea Caldera began. Within two weeks, 125,000 visitors flocked to the park to see the show. Unfortunately, the realities of an active lava flow within the park got in the way of signing up new members. The park interpretive staff was stretched thin dealing with the large influx of visitors, and they did not have the time or resources to devote to selling more than new memberships per day. In addition, after the first few weeks the park noted a decrease in the daytime visitations, and an increase in visitors who wanted to view the eruption in darkness. The night conditions made it difficult for park staff to contact visitors and write out certificates. The Volcano House, the perfect place to sell certificates, was also overwhelmed with a large influx and overload of guests. 65 Ideas of putting out a booth closer to the eruption site was dismissed by the superintendent, who felt that such structures would be obtrusive and that people would feel too pressured to sign up. 66 With the exhibits for the new museum at Hawaii National Park completed, the park planned a live dedication ceremony over the Hawaii Calls radio program to celebrate 70. The program would include Hawaiian music ( ancient songs ), and legends of the volcano. To cap off the event, Hui O Pele would award an honorary lifetime membership to Uncle George Lycurgus, the host of the Volcano House. The program aired on May 23, 1953 and was broadcast over 700 stations of the Mutual Broadcasting System. It was believed that the broadcast reached an audience of between 40 and 50 million people. The show was an excellent advertisement for the park, and the Hui, which celebrated its 30th anniversary that year. After thirty years of dedicated service to Hawaii National Park, the Hui counted 40,000 lifetime members the 40,000th membership went to Harry S. Truman, President of the United States. 71 Cooperative Efforts Continue on Projects Large and Small With the park depending on their philanthropic organizations to support projects both large and small, it was obvious that additional funding efforts would be needed. The Hui and the park superintendent felt that to reach their funding goals, they had to look for a stronger more active organization to sponsor their group. Photo Top: Visitors at Thurston Lava Tube in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Photo Right: 1952 Eruption, small fountaining beginning. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Regardless of these challenges, 1952 was a record year for Hui membership sales, in large part thanks to the eruption and HNHA, which took charge of organizing and managing it. 67 The following years saw even greater improvement when HNHA expanded its sales reach by issuing certificates at the Kona Inn. 68 That year, with a final influx of $1, of Hui O Pele funds, $3,500 from the Hawai i Natural History Association, and $1,750 of appropriated funds, all of the museum exhibits were completed. One void remained to be filled a diorama depicting a typical Hawaiian Village. The diorama was estimated to cost $10,000. The park naturalist felt that at least half of that could be covered easily by the Hawai i Natural History Association, and it was hoped the other half would be paid for by Hui O Pele. 69 National Park Service 15

18 Photo Top: Newly completed Kalapana- Chain of Craters Road in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Photo Bottom: Kalapana Ranger Station in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 16 Gathering On The Rim They repeatedly pushed to sign up new local members, as Hui President Charles Frazier felt that every man, woman and child in Hilo and the island of Hawai i should hold a card of membership in the hui. 72 They hoped that the Hilo Junior Chamber of Commerce, their new sponsor, would be able to provide that local support they had long sought. 73 Perhaps the Hui was looking too far beyond the park boundaries, as their greatest financial support during this period came from HNHA. Both groups continued to cooperate, and were a mutual benefit to each other. In 1954, HNHA adopted a new constitution and their financial affairs were sound. The group continued to purchase books for the library, and to stock their sales shelves with guides, books, and volcano movies for sale to the public. They also expanded into service operations, selling flashlights to the public for Thurston Lava Tube trips. They also paid to fund (not to exceed $100) a project to assist the Volcano Observatory to purchase foreign periodicals as well as to reprint the Volcano Letter for exchange purposes. 74 Spearheaded by HNHA, Hui sales were brisk, and their coffers grew. Superintendent Wosky felt that it was a good time to request funds for a new project. On April 27, 1955 Wosky requested $1,500 to build signs made out of 2" redwood stock and erected on 4x4 redwood posts. A total of 24 signs would be routed with letters painted bright yellow. The signs would be used as interpretive features on highways in the park to explain the significance of most outstanding attractions in a manner comparable to that of a label in a museum exhibit. 75 By June 30, 1956 Park Ranger Robert Jacobsen reported that the Hui O Pele Interpretive Sign Program had been successfully completed. A total of 27 large interpretive signs, five information and public safety signs, 16 elevation signs, and two residence signs had been constructed and 12 old signs had been partially rehabilitated. 76 Two months later, Wosky again requested another $1,500 for funds to continue and expand the sign program. Wosky touted the success of the previous use of Hui funds and stated that although regular park funds were available for these kinds of project, that the funding provided by the government was not enough. Wosky s request was approved and a check for the funds was mailed to the park on January 30, This was also a positive time for the parks other philanthropic group, HNHA. By 1956, the association account was flush, and they needed to divest their account. The group took several actions to achieve this. They streamlined their operations and decreased the number of items available for sale, invested association money in government bonds, transferred (via donation) ownership of non-sales equipment from HNHA to the park, and waived all dues in 1956 for employees of Hawaii National Park, the Volcano Observatory, and active local residents of Hawai i Island that were in good standing. 78 In 1960, HNHA had its most profitable year to date ($10,216.95). The activities of the association and the level of funding prompted members to discuss hiring someone to handle the routine affairs of the organization. They also discussed paying for park interpretive staff, because the park appropriations were not enough to cover staff salaries. 79 The director of the National Park Service also requested that HNHA contribute to a special fund. The nature and purpose of which was not outlined. In 1961, a letter from the special assistant to the director, he indicated that HNHA should contribute 2% of their net profit for 1960 ($200) to this fund. Kalapana Extension Throughout 1957 and 1958 HNHA continued to be the biggest sellers of Hui O Pele memberships. They also managed and transferred Hui money collected from the Volcano House. By mid-1958, Hui O Pele had $3,000 in the bank and they were looking for additional projects to fund. The timing could not have been any better, because the park was in the midst of discussions regarding the purchase of the Kalapana Extension and the extension of the Chain of Craters road. There were numerous land issues that needed to be worked out

19 Photo Top Left: Archeolological Site identified during Bishop Museum survey. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Photo Top Right: Kalapana black sand beach. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. before the park service could obtain title. Until these issues were resolved, the federal government could not expend any funds on the extension. 80 This was an unfortunate situation, because many projects were needed before the acquisition could take place. Before the Chain of Craters Road was extended, and Kalapana lands purchased, the park wanted a scientific survey of the area so that an appropriate route for the road could be chosen. It was widely known that rare and endemic vegetation and unique cultural ruins existed in the proposed parcel and the park wanted to preserve these. The park tried unsuccessfully for two years to get federal funds to pay for the inventories which they wanted the Bishop Museum to complete. The superintendent finally turned to Hui O Pele and HNHA to pay for the studies. HNHA committed $4,000, and Hui O Pele was asked to provide an additional $3,000 for the project. This would cover the $7,000 that Dr. Kenneth Emory of the Bishop Museum estimated would cost for the arche0logical survey. 81 This was the first effort by the park to inventory and preserve its vast cultural resources. There was some resistance from the Hui members to funding the inventory survey. Members felt that Hui funds should only be used for facilities that would directly benefit the visitor. Superintendent Fred Johnson wrote an impassioned letter to the Hui O Pele president explaining that the Mission 66 program had filled the need for public facilities, which had long been the focus of Hui funds. The superintendent pointed out that the need now lay with the scientific study, the timing was critical, and he felt that the work to be done was in keeping with the mission of the Hui. 82 Following the receipt of Superintendent Johnson s letter, the Hui approved the funding, and a Hui check was turned over to HNHA which became the vehicle for paying the Bishop Museum. The Hui Comes Home By 1961 Hui board members were aging, and there was a sense of a neglect of the affairs. 83 Many felt that the headquarters of the organization should move to Hilo where, perhaps, new life would be injected into it. Following a vote on Marcy 17, 1961 to move the headquarters, Superintendent Johnson quickly saw to the reorganization and election of a new board. 84 Much had changed since Hui O Pele had first been organized. Hawaii National Park had recently been split into two parks (Hawai i Volcanoes and Haleakalā), and increased funding was now available from the federal government and HNHA for park projects. Board members felt that it was time for the role of the Hui to change, and they discussed expanding the reach of the Hui beyond the borders of the park. Specifically, National Park Service 17

20 Photo Top Left: 1877 Volcano House circa Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Photo Top Right: Modern view of 1877 Volcano House. Image courtesy of Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park. 18 Gathering On The Rim they discussed providing funds to assist the Hawaii Visitors Bureau (HVB) projects, and research at HVO, as well as providing University scholarships, lectures and publications for children. 85 Despite these discussions, a few months after the June meeting the superintendent of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park was again approaching the Hui for funds to provide signage for the park a familiar project that was commonly supported by the Hui in the past. The signs proposed for construction included one for Devastation Trail, exhibits for Kīlauea Iki, Halemaumau and HVO, and 15 replacement signs for those that were vandalized. A total of $1,000 was requested and approved to supplement federal funds which the superintendent said did not adequately cover the expense. 86 In 1960 there was an outbreak and eruption of lava in Kapoho, an area located completely outside of the park boundary. To capitalize on this new event, the Hui once again modified their sales policies to fit the situation. They approved of the sale of certificates to visitors at the site, and they agreed to fund the construction of interpretive displays there as well. 87 The regional director approved these actions, saying that as long as the funds were used for interpretation of the volcano and its associated environment, the scope of the Hui could be expanded. Following the exciting eruptive events of , the Hui was fairly inactive between 1962 and At a board meeting on February 20, 1964, the board voted to register the Hui as a non-profit organization with the State of Hawai i. 88 New by-laws and a new Constitution were finally re-worked, and the purpose of the organization was altered to reflect the changes made during the Kapoho eruption. The Board officially voted to provide financial support for educational and other suitable activities that related to Kīlauea Volcano. Membership was also extended to those who had viewed a volcanic eruption on the Island of Hawai i (not just at Kīlauea or within the boundary of the park). Immediately drawing on their new by-laws, the Board voted in 1964 to develop a film of an authentic Hawaiian luau for the interpretive program at Kalapana, and they voted to rehabilitate the 1877 Volcano House as an historic exhibit. The building had been turned over to the National Park Service by Nick Lycurgus, and the board felt that the structure was worthy of rehabilitation. The Hui also agreed to contribute $1,000 towards the June 19, 1965 dedication of the Chain of Craters Road. The Hui had been instrumental in paying for the cultural and natural resources inventories so that the road could be constructed. Thus, supporting the grand opening would mean the Hui came full circle

21 Photo Top and Bottom: Views of the 1960 Kapoho eruption. Images courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. on the project. One final vote during that meeting saw the Hui agreeing to purchase new lanterns and stoves for the Red Hill and summit cabins because the park service could not afford to replace the inoperative and dangerous ones that were up there. 89 Four months later the board voted to purchase more cabin supplies including dishes, pots, and containers at a cost of up to $50, and the board authorized up to $600 to be spent on the restoration and framing of the 1898 A. Howard Hitchcock painting of Halema uma u with Pele that had been donated to the park by the artist s son, Harvey Hitchcock. 90 The following October, the Hui donated $1,200 for the purchase of two-way radio communication for the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO). Dr. Powers of HVO requested the funding because of the need for the radios during eruptions and because he felt it would be years before an appropriation for the radios would be included in its regular budget. 91 A radio was installed in two vehicles and a base station was placed in the observatory. It was the first time in the history of Hui O Pele that funding was provided for an agency other than the National Park Service. By 1968, the Hui was still adding a considerable number of new members to their group. With these additional fees, they were able to purchase a new double case museum exhibit to display a working seismograph. In January 1970, they allotted an additional $4,000 to assist in museum rehabilitation. This project would include painting, new light fixtures, new floor coverings, exhibit cases and an information center. HNHA Expands Beyond Kilauea Like the Hui, the 1960 s proved to be a time for HNHA to expand beyond the borders of Hawaii National Park. The first task came with the split, in 1961 of Hawaii National Park into two Hawai i Volcanoes National Park (HAVO) and Haleakalā National Park (HALE). This prompted the Board of Directors of HNHA to add an additional two seats to the Board of Directors one which would be for a Haleakala member and the other for a non-service member to balance out the National Park Service (NPS) presence on the board. The involvement of HNHA in Hawai i parks was growing. Not only would the organization represent the two parks as separate entities, but they also financially supported programs at the City of Refuge. 92 HNHA also started to get more directly involved in financing park projects. The association voted to donate $500 to the park on a revolving basis should Hui O Pele be unable to support park projects. The members also explored the idea of paying for research that was important to the park, but for which the park service was unable to fund. 93 The first of such projects was an ecological study of the Devastation Area. HNHA donated $5,000 to the NPS to pay the University of Hawai i for a contract to conduct a bioecological survey, and an additional $200 to purchase equipment for the Devastation Area Plant Recovery Study. 94 By 1969, HNHA had supported the Ed Ladd stabilization project at Waha ula and was considering a number of vegetation management projects at both HAVO and HALE. By 1964, the size and complexity of HNHA was growing, prompting the Board to change the by-laws to incorporate language allowing for the hiring of a business manager. Both the treasurer and business manager were now going to be paid positions. In 1965, the association took on an even bigger role, voting to donate money to purchase Land Parcel 13 to the NPS. Land Parcel 13 was located between Waha ula Heiau and the Inaba Subdivision of Kalapana. The land area was within the designated boundary of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park, but neither the state nor the park service had the funds to acquire the piece. The following year, HNHA contracted with Frances Jackson to write and publish a park history in celebration of the park 50th anniversary in August. HNHA also paid for the travel expenses of park staff because NPS general funds were not available. National Park Service 19

22 Parks Expand, Budgets Contract The 1950 s and 60 s saw flush years for Hui O Pele and HNHA. This was a great benefit to the federal agencies because by 1972, both the NPS and USGS were coming upon difficult fiscal times. Both groups requested financial assistance from HNHA. The association members decided that since the agency benefited the park visitors and island residents, they would support the request. A total of $4,000 was given to USGS to pay for a tilt meter, film processing and seismograph supplies. The NPS meanwhile, continued to request for funding to support both paid positions and project work. 95 Throughout the 1970 s park staff requested funds from the Hui to cover small, basic needs. The requests ranged from $165 for Xerox copies of reference materials for the park library, to $276 to purchase blankets for the Summit and Red Hill cabins, and $1,000 for the construction and installation of a trail shelter to replace the existing cabin at Halapē. 96 The building, a three walled shelter of lava rock with aluminum roof and fiberglass tank for water catchment, was later constructed by the Youth Conservation Corps (YCC) in the summer of Requests for the Hui to support minor infrastructure and supplies continued through the 1970 s, including requests for cabin supplies, a backcountry hiking and camping information center, a backcountry map for the backcountry management plan, and a weed eater to clear backcountry trails of vegetation. 97 from simple changes like developing distinct HNHA uniforms, and holding meetings more than once a year, to more organizational changes like restructuring the membership so that NPS staff did not play a pivotal role in decision making. Complying with the solicitor s recommendations would prove a good move, because HNHA s responsibilities and role in the Pacific Island parks expanded in 1978 with the passage of the Federal Omnibus Bill. The bill authorized extra acreage for the City of Refuge (formally changed to Pu uhonua O Hōnaunau), the inclusion of Kaloko-Honokōhau National Historical Park in the NPS System, the addition of Guam National Seashore and an area in Saipan, and finally the turnover of the Arizona Memorial to the NPS along with shore side facilities. 100 It was decided the next year that separate associations should serve Guam, Saipan, and the Arizona Memorial. Kaloko began to be serviced by HNHA in The dependence on the association by the parks for covering basic personnel services continued. In 1980, with the park service continuing to face difficult financial times, 46% of the park s interpretive budget was covered by asssociation funds. 102 The federal hiring freeze instituted in January 1981 put the NPS in an even more difficult staffing situation. The association Image Right: Cartoon of Hui O Pele found in the Volcano House Register. No Date. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 20 Gathering On The Rim Much like the Hui, the 1970 s saw HNHA expanding its role but in their case, it was a service wide expansion throughout the Pacific Island parks. The association was doing well by 1975, with gross sales over $200,000. It was one of the ten largest associations of the 55 service-wide. 98 The nationwide growth and influence of the natural history associations likely spurred an opinion by the solicitor that the philanthropic groups should create a distinct separation between their operations and NPS operations. There was a concern that as the associations grew bigger, and collected more money, that there might be some improper influences either real or perceived. 99 Recommendations ranged

23 attempted to fill in and supplement the parks as best they could. However, the Federal Government s directive outlining the hiring freeze also limited the ability of HNHA to provide support to the parks, because it specifically noted that contracting with firms and institutions outside the Government will not be used to alleviate or circumvent the effect of this hiring freeze. 103 Association funds for hiring NPS personnel were now capped at 20%. In an effort to equally distribute funds, the HNHA Board voted to earmark 13% of the gross income obtained from each park back to that individual park. The board came up with a list of park project priorities, but agreed that the final decision would be left to the NPS. 104 Thus, the percentages that each park received, was based on each park s individual gross income. Therefore, the amounts were fair considering the larger parks brought in more income than the smaller ones did. In 1985, the anticipated gross income for HNHA was $735,000 with approximately $140,000 anticipated to be donated to the parks in By 1990, revenue for Hawai i Volcanoes alone, topped $700,000, accounting for nearly 70% of all income generated by HNHA. 105 Dropping Like Flies The End of Hui O Pele The rapid growth and expansion of HNHA was a blessing to Hawai i Volcanoes National Park, because the 1980 s brought an end to its then oldest philanthropic organization Hui O Pele. The final request for funding from the Hui documented in the HAVO archives is a request in 1980 for whatever funds the Hui could afford to cover the cost of sampling and treating backcountry water supplies in the six cabins and shelters within the park. 106 The park was required Photo Right: Chief Ranger Christ at traditional Hawaiian Hale in Kalapana circa Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. National Park Service 21

24 by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to perform the tests, but the funding available for the project was only going to last through June In a handwritten note back to Superintendent Ames, the last known Hui O Pele President, Arthur Herbst, noted that age is creeping up on the Hui O Pele Board of Directors and they are dropping like flies. Herbst authorized the funds without consulting the board because he did not want to hold up the park. 107 Hui O Pele survived for 58 years and contributed over $38,000 in monetary support to the park based on one dollar donations. The funds were used to build much needed infrastructure at a time when the federal government was unable or unwilling to support certain park projects. After years of dedication and tireless service to the park, the organization came to an end. In 1980, the western regional director was expressing concern over the financial and legal aspects of the organization. With support from the Board of Directors waning, the decision to transfer the funds from Hui O Pele to HNHA was made. Documentation confirming the transfer of funds from Hui O Pele to HNHA was not found in the park files, but it appears to have been seamless. There was some discussion of HNHA continuing to give out membership certificates as a token for donations made to the association. However, it does not appear that HNHA continued to support the Hui certificates. The absorption of Hui O Pele into HNHA was a natural transition for the two groups. For decades, they had worked side by side for the benefit of the park; many of the programs and projects supported by the Hui in its final decades overlapped with those of HNHA. While not the first philanthropic organization within Hawaii National Park, the demise of Hui O Pele makes the Hawai i Natural History Association (HNHA) currently the longest running philanthropic organization within the park. Throughout its 75 years of existence, HNHA has contributed tens of thousands of dollars to the park service in the form of direct monetary funding, support staff, purchase of library books, the development of publications, brochures and postcards, donations for exhibits, art, signs, videos and displays, museum, research, vehicle and library support, and numerous others. HNHA is one of the largest and most profitable natural history associations nationally, and remains a strong and important contributor to the park. The association was the sole philanthropic group for several decades until they were joined more recently by a friends organization a nationally based group that focused primarily on activities other than retail sales. Friends of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park The youngest philanthropic organization to join the park ranks grew out of Na Hoaloha (friends of) Āinahou, a not-for-profit volunteer organization. Established in 1997, Na Hoaloha was devoted to improving the historic Āinahou ranch house and the surrounding gardens found within the park. As its focus and mission expanded, the organization began doing business as the Friends of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park (FHVNP) in Friends is a not-for-profit, membership organization working as a partner with the park to augment park resources by offering educational programs, administering grants, and raising funds for agreed-upon park projects. FHVNP provides a volunteer workforce for ongoing invasive species removal and native forest restoration while also continuing maintenance of Āinahou Ranch and its grounds. Today, largely due to the hard work of dedicated volunteers, this treasured ranch retains its character as a manicured showcase of exotics within a native mesic forest. 108 Over the years, members of this evolving organization have contributed thousands of volunteer hours to these works, broadening their scope to include projects that benefitted the entire park, as well as Āinahou. With the expansion of the friends role, a formal partnership agreement and specific project guidelines have been jointly drafted to clarify and guide collaborations between the park and friends. 22 Gathering On The Rim

25 Increasingly, FHVNP has raised funds through memberships, grants, field seminars, an annual silent auction, and other special events. The organization has received grants from the National Park Foundation, the Hawai i Tourism Authority, the Hawai i Council for the Humanities, the 50 th Anniversary Statehood Commission, and the Hawai i Community Foundation, among others. Grants have supported such projects as the Parks as Classrooms program, the park s annual cultural festival, the publication of oral histories of the Āinahou Ranch and the junior rangers guidebook. Friends fundraising paid for interpretive wayside exhibits at the newly refurbished Sulfur Banks Trail. Special fundraising events have included collecting donations at the park entrance gate on National Public Lands Day and hosting a Paniolo Day celebrating the Hawaiian cowboy history of the recently acquired former ranchlands, the 116,000 acre Kahuku unit. A second fundraiser featured writer and co-producer, Dayton Duncan, of Ken Burns National Parks documentary series at an evening venue. In every instance, the friends board and members made great effort to raise money for the park, while developing their capacity to become an increasingly effective park partner. At the same time, the park has committed considerable time and effort to help the Friends succeed. In 2009 the friends secured several grants and received numerous in-kind donations to launch an expanded educational initiative, the Hawai i Volcanoes Institute. In redefining their rapidly-growing field seminar series as a park institute, the friends entered a larger arena where not-for-profit partners support well-established educational institutes in Yellowstone, Glacier, North Cascades and many other national parks. A consequence of this expansion and growing visibility of the friends is the need for increased planning. In 2009, grants supported a joint park/friends retreat and a subsequent strategic planning session to further define and develop the organization. Photo Right: Äinahou House. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. National Park Service 23

26 Photo Top: Youth Conservation Corps (YCC) working in the Kalapana Extension. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. In all of these ways, the Friends of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park is an organization which is constantly growing and renewing itself. Again and again, volunteers step forward to realize an evolving vision and dynamic partnership with the park. The resilience and energy of the organization are among its greatest assets. The friends succeed in their mission to connect people with the park in many ways: through a rapidly growing membership (from 40 members in 2002 to more than 300 in 2010), by raising funds for park needs, through a diversity of educational experiences which began as the friends field seminar series and is now a thriving Hawai i Volcanoes Institute, through the care and public tours of Āinahou, and by mounting volunteer teams to remove invasive species and restore native forests. As of 2010, the friends manage all of this with two half-time employees, an administrative assistant and an institute programs coordinator. With the guidance of a working board, volunteer contributions and rewarding partnerships are the core of the organization s achievements. This growing network engages Hawai i s residents and visitors and expands the park s constituency. Increasingly, the friends are becoming a stronger and more effective partner in support of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Conclusion In 2016, Hawai i Volcanoes National Park will celebrate its centennial anniversary. For nearly 100 years, Hawai i Volcanoes has stood out as one of the gems of the National Park Service crafted and shined by the hard work, selfless dedication, and personal efforts of ordinary citizens. These individuals and groups have banded together to dedicate and promote the legacy of the natural and cultural heritage of the lands of Kīlauea and Mauna Loa. Endnotes 1 William Ellis, A Narrative of an 1823 Tour Throughout Hawaii. With remarks on the history, traditions, manners, customs, and language of the inhabitants of the Sandwich Islands, (1826), H. Fisher, Son, and P. Jackson, London. 2 Moniz Nakamura, J., "Fire On The Rim. The Creation of Hawaii National Park," Hawaii Volcanoes National Park Occasional Papers. Volume 1, No Moniz Nakamura, Fire On The Rim 4 Thurston, Lorrin A., The Proposed Hawaiian National Park, In The Mid-Pacific Magazine, 1911, 1(3): Darcy Bevens, On the Rim of Kilauea. Excerpts from the Volcano House Register, , (Hawaii Natural History Association, Hawaii National Park, Hawaii, 1992). 6 Nash Castro, The Land of Pele. A Historical Sketch of Hawaii National Park, Hawaii Nature Notes, 1953, 5(2):14. 7 Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Castro, The Land of Pele, pg. 57; Myra Tomonari-Tuggle and K. Slocumb, Integrated Resources Management Plan for Kilauea Military Camp, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, Island of Hawaii, International Archaeological Research Institute Inc., 2000:III Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Tomonari-Tuggle, Integrated Resources Management Association, Hawaii National Park, Hawaii, 1992). 11 Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Thurston, Lorrin A., The Story of a Volcano, The Mid- Pacific Magazine (1921), 21(1): Thurston, The Proposed Hawaiian National Park, pg Gathering On The Rim

27 Photo Top: Red Hill Cabin, built with funds from Hui O Pele as seen in Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 16 Thurston, The Story of a Volcano, pg Thurston, The Story of a Volcano, pg Thurston, The Story of a Volcano, pg Thurston, The Story of a Volcano, pg Thurston, The Story of a Volcano, pg Castro, The Land of Pele, pg. 46; Moniz Nakamura unpub ms. 22 Castro, The Land of Pele, pg Castro, The Land of Pele. 24 Superintendents Reports 1922, 1923, Superintendents Annual Report, 1922, pg Superintendents Annual Report, 1921 and Superintendents Report, March 1924, pg George Mellen, Hui O Pele In Hawaiian Annual for The Reference Book of Information and Statistics Relating to the Territory of Hawaii. Thos. G. Thrum, compiler and publisher. Fifty-first Issue. Honolulu, Hawaii (1924), pg Mellen, pg Mellen, pg Mellen, Pg Mellen, pg Hawaii Tribune November 7, 1927 Hawaii National Park Report. 34 Hawaii Tribune November 7, 1927 Hawaii National Park Report. 35 Superintendents Report, October 6, Letter from R.T. Evans, Superintendent to Mr. Bredhoff, Secretary-Treasurer of Hui O Pele, May 7, Letter from de Vis-Norton to Superintendent Thomas J. Allen, January 26, Letter January 26, Letter January 26, Letter from T.J. Allen Jr. to de Vis-Norton dated February 7, 1929, HAVO Archives. 41 Letter from de Vis-Norton to T.J. Allen Jr. dated February 11, 1929, HAVO Archives. 42 Letter dated February 11, Letter from de Vis-Norton to T.J. Allen dated June 9, 1930; Letter from de Vis-Norton to T.J. Allen dated September 9, Letter from T.J. Allen to de Vis-Norton dated September 5, Letter from Henry Bredhoff, Treasurer Hui O Pele to T.J. Allen dated December 15, Letter from Leavitt to de Vis-Norton, dated February 26, Letter from T.J. Allen to Director of the National Park Service, dated April 2, 1930; Letter from Letter from Horace M. Albright to T.J. Allen dated April 29, 1930; Letter from T.J. Allen to L.W. de Vis Norton dated August 8, Letter from de Vis-Norton to Leavitt, dated February 19, Suggested By-Laws for Hui O Pele Committee of The Outdoor Circle, adopted November Letter from E. Wingate to Director of the National Park Service, dated January 19, Letter from E. Wingate to de Vis Norton, dated February 15, National Park Service 25

28 52 Letter from Leavitt to de Vis-Norton, dated July 1, Hui O Pele, Hawaii Constitution and By-laws, Article II. 54 Letter from Superintendent Oberhansley to George Armitage, dated February 14, Letter from Superintendent Oberhansley to George Armitage, dated May 11, Letter from E.P. Leavitt, Superintendent to L.W. de Vis- Norton, dated July 11, Memorandum to the Superintendent from John Doerr, President HNHA, dated June 15, Minutes of Meeting of Hawaii National Park Natural History Association, February 7, Minutes of Meeting of Hawaii Natural History Association, January 11, Minutes of Meeting of Hawaii Natural History Association, November 15, Minutes of the Annual Meeting, dated March 9, Minutes of Board of Directors, June 22, Memorandum from the Superintendent, Hawaii National Park, January 23, Memorandum from Regional Director, Region Four, Lawrence Merriam to Hawaii National Park Superintendent, dated April 9, Letter from Frank Oberhansley to Charlie Frazier, dated July 11, Letter from Frank Oberhansley to Charlie Frazier, dated July 28, Letter from Frank Oberhansley to Charlie Frazier, dated December 1, Letter from V.R. Bender Jr., Business Manager HNHA to W. Coswell, Hui O Pele Secretary Notes for Hui O Pele Meeting; Report of 1953 Accomplishments, dated March 23, Notes for Hui O Pele Meeting. 71 Letter from V.R. Bender Jr., to W. Cosgwel, dated April 15, Letter from Charles Frazer to Glenn Mitchell, dated April 28, Letter from Frank Oberhansley, Superintendent to Arthur Evers, dated March 29, Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors, Hawaii Natural History Association, February 15, Letter from John Wosky, Superintendent to W. Cogswell, dated April 27, Memorandum from Ranger Robert Jacobsen to Chairman of the Sign Committee, dated July 6, Letter from J. Wosky to W. Cogswell, dated August 23, Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors, HNHA, Minutes of, dated January 28, Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors of HNHA, January 27, 1960; Special Meeting of the Board of Directors, August 25, Letter from J. Wosky to W. Cogswell, dated April 1, Letter from J. Wosky to W. Cogswell, dated February 20, Letter from Fred Johnston, Superintendent to W. Cogswell, dated April 9, Letter from W. Cogswell to Fred Johnson, dated February 20, Memo to the Files from Fred Johnson, dated March 22, Gathering On The Rim

29 85 Minutes of June 2, 1961 meeting. 86 Letter from Fred Johnson to Wayne Richardson, dated October 31, 1961; Memo from Chief Park Naturalist to Superintendent dated October 31, Minutes of Board of Directors Meeting, dated February 26, Minutes of the Annual Meeting, dated February 20, Minutes of the Executive Meeting dated January 19, Minutes of the Board of Directors meeting dated October 26, Group Gives $1,200 For Volcano Radio, Hawaii Tribune Herald, October 27, Annual Meeting, Board of Directors, HNHA, January 18, Minutes Meeting of the Board of Directors, dated September 21, HNHA Board Meeting Minutes, dated June 18, Bulletin No. 81-6, dated January 24, Minutes of Meeting of the Board of Directors, dated September 24, Minutes Meeting of the Board of Directors, dated July 19, Letter from David Ames to Arthur Herbst dated June 20, Letter from Arthur Herbst to David Ames, dated July 22, National Park Service Cultural Landscape Inventory, Ainahou Ranch House and Gardens, dated Annual Meeting, Board of Directors and General Membership, February 20, Annual Meeting, Board of Directors, Hawaii Natural History Association, February 24, Annual Meeting, Board of Directors, Hawaii Natural History Association, February 9, Letter from Chris Cameron, Acting Superintendent to Arthur Herbst, dated September 24, Letter from David Ames, Superintendent to Arthur Herbst, dated June 15, Memorandum to the Members of the Board, HNHA, dated October 30, 1975; Annual Meeting notes, dated November 19, Memorandum to Members of the Board, HNHA, dated December 1, HNHA Board Meeting Minutes, dated May 19, National Park Service 27

30 Photo Top: Fern Forest. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Photo Bottom: Pahoehoe flow in Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. Image courtesy of Hawai i Volcanoes National Park. 28 Gathering On The Rim

31 Projects and Funds Contributed by Hui O Pele (list not complete) Project Date Cost Equivalent buying power in Thurston Lava Tube Shelter 1927 $ $3, E. Pauahi Crater Shelter 1927 $83.83 $1, Halemaumau Trail Shelter 1928 $ $1, Chain of Craters Road Opening Day Ribbons 1928 $24.65 $ Shelter at Hilina Pali 1930 $ $10, Uwekahuna Lecture Hall 1930 $3, $47, Chairs at Uwekahuna Lecture Hall 1932 $700 $10, Summit Rest House on Mauna Loa 1934 $2,500 $39, Eruption Film Purchase 1947 $100 $ Framed Certificates 1949 $150 $1, Selectoslide 1949 $ $3, Park Museum Units 1950 $9,500 $84, Park Museum Units 1952 $500 $4, Park Museum Units 1952 $2,000 $16, Park Museum Units 1953 $1, $14, Wooden Interpretive Signs 1955 $1,500 $11, Wooden Interpretive Signs 1956 $1,000 $7, Kalapana Survey 1958 $3,000 $22, Dedication of Chain of Craters Road 1964 $1,000 $6, Cabin Supplies 1964 $50 $ Hitchcock Painting Restoration and Framing 1964 $600 $4, Two-way radios for HVO 1964 $1,200 $8, Double-case Museum Display Case Museum Rehab 1970 $4,000 $22, Xeroxing of Thrum s Hawaiian Annual 1972 $162 $ Summit and Red Hill Cabin Blankets 1973 $276 $1, Cabin at Halape 1974 $1,000 $4, Cabin Supplies 1974 $100 $ Hiking and Camping Information at KVC 1977 $500 $1, Backcountry Cabin Supplies 1978 $400 $1, Backcountry Cabin Supplies and Weedwacker 1979 $500 $1, Sampling and Treatment of Backcountry Cabin Water 1980 National Park Service 29

32 National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Hawai i Volcanoes National Park PO Box 52 Hawaii National Park, HI A World Heritage site NATIONAL PARK HAWAI I VOLCANOEs and biosphere reserve

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